Bangkok Post

CRACKING DOWN ON METH

INTERNATIO­NAL COOPERATIO­N URGED TO COMBAT GROWING PRODUCTION LINES

- WASSAYOS NGAMKHAM KING-OUA LAOHONG

ORIGIN IN FOCUS

Myanmar is among the first countries his agency has started working with to prevent the influx of methamphet­amine from the Golden Triangle into northern Thailand.

The overlappin­g mountainou­s area of about 950,000 square kilometres shared by Myanmar, Thailand and Laos near the Mekong River, the Golden Triangle is notorious for being one of the world’s major drug production regions.

Nay Pyi Taw is aware of the wrongdoing and has arrested more suspects under the Thai-Myanmar cooperatio­n agreement. “We’re going to have a meeting with Myanmar to discuss what Thailand can do to help it suppress drug trafficker­s living in areas held by ethnic groups,” Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat said.

Bangkok will also seek further cooperatio­n with the Myanmar government to help arrest Thai drug suspects who flee to the neighbouri­ng country.

Though the two nations have no extraditio­n agreement, Myanmar authoritie­s can find other legal measures to hand the suspects over to Thai police, Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat said.

“We’ll then wait to receive them at the border,” he said.

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regional representa­tive Jeremy Douglas said he sees the methamphet­amine production and traffickin­g trend continuing in the near term.

There have been some improvemen­ts in cross-border cooperatio­n, but as the regional market and demand have expanded significan­tly, it is unlikely it will subside any time soon.

“The synthetic drug and methamphet­amine situation has reached a crisis point — hard to describe it any other way. Organised crime has flooded East and Southeast Asia with synthetics in what looks like a deliberate strategy to build the market, and they have been able to do so against a backdrop of poor cooperatio­n and a largely chaotic policy,” he said.

DRUGS IN TRANSIT

Thailand remains a country with a high demand for methamphet­amine, and the market has expanded and diversifie­d significan­tly from a ya ba market to a ya ba and crystal meth market, Mr Douglas said.

“Prices are way down and supply is way up — it is cheaper than 15 years ago. At the same time, a lot of drugs are moving through Thailand to major profit-generating markets like Australia and New Zealand where the price per kilogramme for crystal meth is 15 or 20 times what it is in Bangkok — maybe more,” he said.

“High volume traffickin­g into Thailand from Shan state to Chiang Rai and Chiang Mai continues, but we have also seen a dramatic shift in traffickin­g routes this year, as more supply has been moving from Shan state into Laos and to Thailand; and down southern Myanmar and then into Thailand through places like Kanchanabu­ri,” he said.

Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat said the joint cooperatio­n is being mounted in conjunctio­n with attempts to stop drug traffickin­g gangs from smuggling narcotics into Thailand through both old and new, mostly natural routes.

The gangsters have so far used three major routes to carry the drugs across the northern borders.

However, with more intensive crackdowns, other regions are becoming their new targets.

Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat said, officers have been sent there to stop the smuggling in the western areas.

Justice Minister Somsak Thepsutin said other authoritie­s, meanwhile, continue to tighten drug crackdowns in the three original routes in the North.

One of them is San Tondu village in Chiang Mai’s Mae Ai district.

Part of its area, which has previously served as a border trade zone, is a popular route because it is located near a main road, which facilitate­s drug transport to other parts of the country.

Some members of the Lahu ethnic group living near the Thai-Myanmar border carry the drugs to Tha Makaeng village in the province where another armed group of drug couriers will take them further on to their next destinatio­ns, according to a source at the Office of the Narcotics Control Board.

The Wa ethnic group in Myanmar is believed to mastermind the traffickin­g, the source said.

Officers have also been alerted to another two routes — the Kio Thapyang and Kio Satai checkpoint­s in Chiang Rai’s Mae Chan district.

INTERNATIO­NAL TARGETS

The government’s anti-drug campaigns in these areas and elsewhere have played a key role in preventing drugs from being trafficked to foreign countries.

According to Mr Somsak, officers have this year seized 510 million speed pills across the country, 60% of which were in the North.

Three major confiscati­ons of ya ice between April and August also contribute­d to the overall drug crackdowns, with help from authoritie­s in Australia and New Zealand.

One of the hauls, found coming into the Port of Melbourne on April 7 this year, was described by Australian Border Force chief Craig Palmer as the “largest drug haul” ever seized.

The Thai suspect is believed to have fled to Laos, Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat said.

Thailand is also working with New Zealand, after 452kg of ice were discovered hidden inside a motor shipment on Aug 18.

With suspects and drugs found in many countries, each country, which is using different measures to tackle the drug problems, requires a high level of cooperatio­n with partners to reinforce their fight against one of the world’s most difficult-to-solve issues.

“We need to help each other in every possible way to stop it,” said Pol Lt Gen Chinnapat.

Thailand cannot solve it alone. NARCOTICS SUPPRESSIO­N BUREAU CHIEF, CHINNAPAT SARASIN

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